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Protesters set Macron’s favourite restaurant on fire in Paris

Macron’s favorite restaurant ‘La Rotande’ in Paris set ablaze by protesters on April 7, 2023.

Demonstrators protesting against Emmanuel Macron’s pension reform have set fire to the French president’s favorite Paris restaurant, La Rotonde.

Some 300 protestors clashed with police outside the posh eatery on the iconic Boulevard du Montparnasse in the capital at around 15:30 CET on Thursday, international media reported, citing authorities.

Stones, bottles and flares were tossed at the security forces, eventually leading to the branded red awnings on the front of La Rotonde catching fire, Russian TV network RT reported.

Firefighters, who were swift to arrive on the scene, did not allow the flames to spread further and extinguished the blaze.

Macron chose La Rotonde to celebrate his victory in the presidential election in 2017. He has also visited the expensive restaurant on many other occasions, occasionally dining there with foreign leaders.

The French president previously told reporters that he developed a fondness for the place during his student years.

Recently, the bistro has become a frequent target of Macron’s opponents, who accuse him of being “the president of the rich.”

In January 2020, a fire started on the restaurant’s terrace, and 10 square meters of the property was burned.

A few weeks later, police arrested a member of the Yellow Vests protest movement on suspicion of arson.

La Rotonde was opened in 1903 and became popular among the creative intellectuals in Paris between the two world wars.

It has been visited by the likes of Ernest Hemingway, Jean Cocteau, Guillaume Apollinaire, and others.

Since January, Paris and the rest of France have remained gripped by large-scale and often violent protests over the government’s decision to raise the retirement age from 62 to 64.

Tensions escalated even further last month after Macron used executive privilege to pass the pension reform bill without a parliamentary vote.

According to the French Interior Ministry, some 57,000 people rallied in Paris on Thursday, which was the eleventh day of nationwide protests.

The General Labor Confederation (CGT) trade union put the attendance much higher – at around 400,000.

Protests have been going on in Paris following the country’s President Emmanuel Macron’s decision to raise the retirement age by two years by sidestepping a vote in the country’s national assembly.

The French President brought the reform following which the retirement age was raised from 62 to 64, justifying it as pertinent to saving France’s pension system from going bankrupt.

The protests have intensified since the government used special powers to push the bill through Parliament without a vote.

Millions of people have been demonstrating and joining strike action since mid-January to show their opposition to the bill.

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